O'Leary Ann, Jemmott John B, Jemmott Loretta S, Bellamy Scarlett, Icard Larry D, Ngwane Zolani
Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 8 Corporate Square Blvd., Atlanta, GA, 30329, USA.
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
AIDS Behav. 2015 Oct;19(10):1842-9. doi: 10.1007/s10461-015-1042-x.
"Men, Together Making a Difference!" is an HIV/STD risk-reduction intervention that significantly increased self-reported consistent condom use during vaginal intercourse compared with a health-promotion attention-control intervention among men (N = 1181) in Eastern Cape Province, South Africa. The present analyses were designed to identify mediators of the intervention's efficacy. The potential mediators were Social Cognitive Theory (SCT) constructs that the intervention targeted, including several aspects of condom-use self-efficacy, outcome expectancies, and knowledge. Mediation was assessed using a product-of-coefficients approach where an α path (the intervention's effect on the potential mediator) and a β path (the potential mediator's effect on the outcome of interest, adjusting for intervention) were estimated independently in a generalized estimating equations framework. Condom-use negotiation self-efficacy, technical-skill self-efficacy, and impulse-control self-efficacy were significant mediators. Although not mediators, descriptive norm and expected friends' approval of condom use predicted subsequent self-reported condom use, whereas the expected approval of sexual partner did not. The present results suggest that HIV/STD risk-reduction interventions that draw upon SCT and that address self-efficacy to negotiate condom use, to apply condoms correctly, and to exercise sufficient control when sexually aroused to use condoms may contribute to efforts to reduce sexual risk behavior among South African men. Future research must examine whether approaches that build normative support for condom use among men's friends are also efficacious.
“男性携手改变现状!”是一项降低艾滋病毒/性传播感染风险的干预措施,与南非东开普省一项促进健康的注意力控制干预措施相比,在男性(N = 1181)中,该措施显著增加了自我报告的阴道性交期间持续使用避孕套的情况。本分析旨在确定该干预措施效果的中介因素。潜在的中介因素是该干预措施所针对的社会认知理论(SCT)结构,包括避孕套使用自我效能感、结果期望和知识的几个方面。使用系数乘积法评估中介作用,其中α路径(干预措施对潜在中介因素的影响)和β路径(潜在中介因素对感兴趣结果的影响,对干预措施进行调整)在广义估计方程框架中独立估计。避孕套使用谈判自我效能感、技术技能自我效能感和冲动控制自我效能感是显著的中介因素。尽管不是中介因素,但描述性规范和朋友对避孕套使用的预期认可预测了随后自我报告的避孕套使用情况,而性伴侣的预期认可则没有。目前的结果表明,借鉴社会认知理论并解决谈判使用避孕套、正确使用避孕套以及在性唤起时充分控制以使用避孕套的自我效能感的降低艾滋病毒/性传播感染风险的干预措施,可能有助于减少南非男性性风险行为的努力。未来的研究必须检验在男性朋友中建立对避孕套使用的规范支持的方法是否也有效。